In the poor workhouses, individuals typically worked long hours ranging from 10 to 16 hours a day, often performing laborious tasks such as breaking stones, picking oakum, or grinding corn. These workhouses aimed to provide relief for the poor while also instilling a sense of discipline through hard work.
Victorians in workhouses often worked long hours, typically around 10-12 hours per day, six days a week. The work was often tedious and strenuous, and the conditions were harsh, contributing to poor health and low morale among the workers.
In workhouses, people typically had to work long hours ranging from 10 to 16 hours a day, with limited breaks and little time for rest. The work was often physically demanding and monotonous, contributing to poor living conditions and widespread discontent among the inhabitants.
a bad thing about a victorian workhouse is that you gt punished if you dont eat all your food
In Britain, work houses were introduced after the Poor Act. Originally, the poor of an area was the responsibility of the parish (i.e. the church), and were cared for using donations from local parishioners. Clearly, the standard of care for people varied wildly, with some people housed in monasteries and convents, while others were more or less left to starve. After the industrial revolution, huge numbers of people flocked to the cities to man the machines in factories. This left the small parishes unable to cope, and so the Poor Act established workhouses as prisons for the poor. And prisons they were: they were almost always segregated, keeping husbands, wives and children apart under pain of strict punishments. Beatings were common, and food and rations were so poor that inmates frequently starved. An oft-quoted example is Andover Workhouse, where food was so scarce that inspectors found inmates in the mortuary eating the bone marrow of their deceased peers!
because they needed money and nearly every body was pooreven the children had to work in the factory. They were treated really badly...
Victorians in workhouses often worked long hours, typically around 10-12 hours per day, six days a week. The work was often tedious and strenuous, and the conditions were harsh, contributing to poor health and low morale among the workers.
The poor and destitute
In a Victorian work house children, adults and elderly went to work in a workhouse if they were poor or badly ill. If they broke the rules then they would be put in a cage in a dark room, fined of even put into prison!
Are there no workhouses? Are there no prisons? And the treadmill is that still employed.
workhouses or the streets
Workhouses were where poor people who had no job or home lived. They earned their keep by doing jobs in the workhouse. Also in the workhouses were orphaned (children without parents) and abandoned children, the physically and mentally sick, the disabled, the elderly and unmarried mothers.
workhouses were ment to be harsh so people didn't want help from them. The workhouses were ment for people who were sick,poor,orphans,etc.
In workhouses, people typically had to work long hours ranging from 10 to 16 hours a day, with limited breaks and little time for rest. The work was often physically demanding and monotonous, contributing to poor living conditions and widespread discontent among the inhabitants.
Scrooge believes that the poor belong in workhouses or prisons if they are unable to support themselves through their own means. He sees no obligation to care for or assist them beyond what is strictly necessary.
Scrooge wants the poor to go to workhouses or prisons, suggesting that they are better off there than on the streets. He believes that those institutions are the appropriate places for the poor to seek help or relief from their difficulties.
a sweatshop
because it was hoped that it would get rid of poverty and people living on the street.